Treachery by Night
23 pages
English

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23 pages
English

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Description

Scotland, 1692. Fifteen-year-old Conn has always dreamed of being a brave warrior, like his cousin Jamie. But brave warriors don't have a withered arm. Then Conn finds a sword in the heather - and he learns to fight using his good arm. As he begins to train in secret, Conn awaits his chance to fight their bitter enemies. When the fateful night comes, Conn is going to need all the battle skills he can muster. Recently republished as a new edition, this book is one of the Shades 2.0 series. This book is perfect for reluctant teens who still want an exciting, unpatronising story that is relevant to their interests and concerns, but who don't want to read a longer novel. With a length of only 6,000 words, and filled with drama, this story will appeal to all reluctant teen readers.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 octobre 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781781274651
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0300€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

“ With his teeth set in a grin, Conn dropped the sword. It clanged on stone. With his good hand, he grabbed the animal by the horns and forced it to stand still.
Then he bent his head and licked the blood from the beast’s side. It tasted sharply of metal.
‘With this blood I shall be a warrior!’ he vowed. ”

CONTENTS

Title Page O ne T wo T hree Four Five Six Seven Eight Afterword More Shades 2.0 titles Copyright
ONE
It was the first of May. Conn Macdonald stood halfway up the steep hill and hated his cousin.
The first of May meant the beginning of summer, and plenty to eat. It meant songs outside the straw-thatched houses, as you worked during the long days. It meant stories inside the houses during the long, light evenings. It meant driving the last few winter-starved cattle up to the high pastures above Glencoe.
And it meant that Conn Macdonald felt even more left out than usual.
He could hear shouts and yells of triumph away down the slopes of the Black Hill. There was no way he could block out the sound. His keen eyes could see the glint of sun on polished steel, the ant-sized people. And his fifteen-year-old cousin Jamie, teaching the young boys of the glen to be warriors. His own cousin, the same age as himself.

On his ninth birthday Conn had joined his cousin Jamie and the rest of the boys who wanted to learn military skills. They would be taken to a field at the far end of the glen and taught how to use swords and muskets.
He had been so excited he could not eat his breakfast bannock. He had not understood his father’s warning not to look forward to something too much.
The grown-ups were kind to him. But it took them a long time to convince him you can’t learn the art of fighting with a deformed arm. You can’t hold a sword with crippled fingers. That was what they told him on his ninth birthday.
‘You have strong legs instead,’ his father Alasdair had comforted. ‘We need good cattle drivers to take the steers to the best pastures.’
Mairi, his mother, had said nothing, but he could see the pain in her eyes. And he hated her for giving birth to him. What good was it to have strong legs, when you couldn’t be a man?
And now, six years later, his cousin was man enough to train the new crop of nine-year-olds to shoot the English. No wonder Conn’s heart was full of bitterness.
Then suddenly, in the last week of May, he found something which changed his life forever.

At the end of the day, most people walked down from the high crags, leaving the cattle to browse on the summer grass. But there were shelters for those who guarded their stock against raiders. Conn had taken to staying up on the high pastures with his father’s sheep and his uncle’s cattle. Down there would be evening tales of great fights against the English and even greater fights against the other clans. These were the last things he wanted to hear.
Until he found the sword.
It was an old broadsword, rusty from years under the heather. But when he rubbed the blade against a stone, that part of its edge became sharp as a razor. Despite its size, it was beautifully balanced.

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